Hundreds of celebrities have been interviewed on "Sunday Morning" since broadcast first went on the air 25 years ago. Some had just arrived on the scene, others were at the heights of their professions and still others were concluding distinguished careers. Here are just some former guests, doing what it is that made them famous.
Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg arrives to the 2003 New York Magazine Awards, held at the Four Seasons Restaurant, Dec. 15, 2003, in New York.
President Bush shares a laugh with his wife Laura, as she makes remarks at a luncheon with African-American Clergy spouses in the State Dining Room of The White House, Jan. 19, 2004, in Washington.
Actor and singer Maurice Chevalier places his straw hat on actress Joanne Woodward's head during the annual celebration of St. Catherine's Day, in Paris, 1963. Chevalier and Woodward appear together in the new film, "My Kind of Love."
Tiger Woods talks about his game, his Tiger Woods Foundation, the upcoming Target World Challenge and his life, including his engagement to Swede Erin Nordegren, at a news conference at Sherwood Country Club in Thousand Oaks, Calif., Dec. 9, 2003.
Entertainer Sammy Davis jr. is shown in a June 12, 1989 photo in his Beverly Hills, Calif. home.
Playwright Neil Simon photographed during an interview.
Yoko Ono stands by a poster of her late husband, ex-Beatle John Lennon, at the premiere of the DVD containing 20 songs and some previously unreleased footage and home movies of Lennon. The premiere was at a London cinema Oct. 14, 2003.
Sir Paul McCartney performing during his concert at Kings Dock, Liverpool, England June 1, 2003. Thousands of McCartney fans descended on Liverpool that day for the final concert of the former Beatle's world tour. Around 30,000 fans arrived at the Kings Dock, near the city center, to watch the concert, which Sir Paul dubbed his homecoming.
Actress Meryl Streep responds to a question during an interview Oct. 10, 2002, in Beverly Hills, Calif. That year, Streep starred in two films: as a highly fictionalized version of author and journalist Susan Orlean in "Adaptation," and as a book editor in the adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel "The Hours."
James Taylor performs "Sweet Baby James" during the 45th Annual Grammy Awards in New York.
Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., speaks during a news conference held to unveil legislation concerning a National Museum of African American History and Culture, in this May 21, 2003, file photo taken in Washington. Lewis, a prominent civil rights leader, would like the museum built on the National Mall, where in 1963, hundreds of thousands of civil rights protesters filled the open green space between the Capitol and Lincoln Memorial.
Former U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno is shown in 2002, during her unsuccessful campaign for governor of Florida.
Broadcway star Bernadette Peters is shown in a May 28, 2002, photograph.
Singer Rosemary Clooney is seen in this April 7, 1987 file photo.